1 posted on
02/28/2005 9:40:38 PM PST by
MarMema
To: Ohioan from Florida
2 posted on
02/28/2005 9:41:01 PM PST by
MarMema
("America may have won the battles, but the Nazis won the war." Virginia Delegate Bob Marshall)
To: MarMema
What a nice article! I wish more could understand the sanctity of life. Too many have either given up hope, or do not have pure motives. I pray that we can stop this injustice from moving forward!
5 posted on
02/28/2005 10:26:28 PM PST by
Ohioan from Florida
(The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.- Edmund Burke)
To: MarMema
7 posted on
02/28/2005 11:47:30 PM PST by
pc93
(http://www.blogsforterri.com)
To: MarMema
We must remind ourselves that Terri Schiavo is not dying and has never been on life support. This is not a case of "letting her die." Her estranged husband, Michael Schiavo, his lawyers and Judge Greer are publicly conspiring to put her to death by a singularly cruel form of execution.
It's all supposedly "legal" -- if you can stomach dozens of false, prejudiced and one-sided court rulings. But in the moral sense, there is no confusion at all about the case: they are murdering her. Their motives are 1) to steal whatever property of hers they haven't already stolen and 2), many believe, to quickly destroy evidence of the criminal assault that Michael may have committed on Terri in 1990.
8 posted on
03/01/2005 12:02:34 AM PST by
T'wit
(If Terri dies, Florida's huge retirement industry will die too. Why go to Florida to get executed?)
To: hocndoc
For nineteen years following a truck crash in 1984, Terry Wallis was paralyzed. At first comatose, he drifted into what is termed a persistent vegetative state (PVS). This is characterized by periods of apparent wakefulness, with open eyes and emitted sounds, although the person is unresponsive to stimuli, such as the voice of a family member. Very few people survive PVS. So the question arises: should such patients be maintained often for years on life-support, including food and hydration, or should they be removed and allowed (i.e., compelled) to die?
The question was answered when Terry Wallis, on June 11 of this year, emerged from his inner imprisonment and spoke to his mother. A simple regimen of anti-depressants seems to have improved his condition dramatically, to the point that he is now on the way to full recovery.
12 posted on
03/01/2005 7:34:27 AM PST by
MarMema
("America may have won the battles, but the Nazis won the war." Virginia Delegate Bob Marshall)
To: MarMema
This will generate some interesting discussion.
Good find, MM!
16 posted on
03/01/2005 8:26:34 AM PST by
TAdams8591
(The call you make may be the one that saves Terri's life!!!!!!)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson